🚩 Interview Red Flags
Companies to Avoid as a UX Newcomer - Protect Your Career Journey
Knowledge is Your Best Protection
As a UX newcomer, especially at 40+, you bring valuable experience but may be unfamiliar with UX industry standards. Some companies prey on newcomers' eagerness to break in. Here's how to spot and avoid exploitative situations.
"We Need a Designer" (Not UXer)
High RiskCompanies that conflate UX with graphic design don't understand what UX professionals do. You'll end up making things "pretty" instead of solving user problems.
Warning Signs:
- Job posting emphasizes "making things look good"
- Portfolio review focuses only on visual design
- Can't explain their current UX process
- No mention of user research or testing
- Expect you to "own all design" including branding
Unrealistic Job Scope
High RiskSome companies want a UX unicorn who does research, design, front-end coding, project management, and marketing. This sets you up for failure and burnout.
Warning Signs:
- Job description lists 15+ different skills required
- Expect UX research, design, AND coding
- Want you to manage projects and budgets too
- No other design or UX team members
- "Wear many hats" mentioned multiple times
Below-Market Compensation
Medium RiskSome companies exploit newcomers' desperation by offering significantly below-market rates. Your life experience has value—don't undersell yourself.
Warning Signs:
- Salary 30%+ below market rate for your location
- "Great for getting experience" as justification for low pay
- No clear path for salary increases
- Unpaid "trial periods" longer than a few hours
- Equity promises in place of competitive salary
Unrealistic Timelines
Medium RiskCompanies that don't understand UX process often expect impossible timelines. This leads to skipped research, poor designs, and constant stress.
Warning Signs:
- "We need this redesigned by next week"
- No time allocated for user research
- Expect major features designed in days
- Rush to launch without testing
- "Just make it like [competitor]" mentality
No UX Leadership or Mentorship
High RiskStarting UX in a company with no UX culture or senior practitioners means you'll struggle to learn and grow. You need guidance, especially as a newcomer.
Warning Signs:
- You'd be the first or only UX person
- No one can explain their design process
- Leadership doesn't understand UX value
- Can't introduce you to UX team (because none exists)
- Previous "UX person" left quickly
No User Research Budget or Access
Medium RiskUX without user research is just personal preference. Companies that won't invest in understanding users don't value good UX.
Warning Signs:
- "We know what users want" without data
- No budget for user testing or research tools
- Can't access actual users for feedback
- Decisions based solely on internal opinions
- "Research takes too long" attitude
🛡️ How to Protect Yourself
Research the Company
Check Glassdoor reviews, look at their product, see if they have a design team page. Red flags often show up in employee reviews.
Ask Specific Questions
"Walk me through your typical UX process. How do you currently gather user feedback? Who would I be working with daily?"
Request Portfolio Examples
Ask to see examples of their recent UX work or case studies. Legitimate UX-focused companies can show their process.
Negotiate From Strength
Your business experience has value. Don't accept "entry-level" treatment if you bring senior professional skills.
Trust Your Instincts
If something feels off or too good to be true, investigate further. Your professional judgment is valuable.
Network for Intel
Connect with other UXers who might know about the company culture. LinkedIn is great for finding insider perspectives.
✅ Green Flags to Look For
Clear UX process they can articulate
Existing UX team or design leadership
Budget for research tools and user access
Realistic timelines that include research phases
Can show examples of user-centered decisions
Competitive compensation for your market
Clear growth and learning opportunities
Values your non-UX professional experience
You Have More Power Than You Think
Your professional experience, business acumen, and life skills make you valuable. Don't let desperation to "break in" lead you into exploitative situations. The right opportunity that values your full skillset is worth waiting for.



